ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Relationships

Research: Liking another group does not imply dislike towards own

California [US], October 9 (ANI): A pair of psychologists conducted research over 70 years ago in which they asked young Black girls to pick between black and white dolls. The girls overwhelmingly preferred white dolls and gave them good traits.

ANI Oct 09, 2022 22:22 IST googleads

Representative image

California [US], October 9 (ANI): A pair of psychologists conducted research over 70 years ago in which they asked young Black girls to pick between black and white dolls. The girls overwhelmingly preferred white dolls and gave them good traits.
The Black girls' choices and reasoning were interpreted by study authors to indicate "a feeling of inferiority among African-American children and damaged... self-esteem."
The die was cast in psychology discourse: If you like a group to which you don't belong -- an "outgroup" -- it's because you have bad feelings about your own group -- your "ingroup."
A UC Riverside study involving more than 879,000 participants published this week challenges the assumption that liking an outgroup means disliking your ingroup.
"Our findings suggest that outgroup preference does not necessarily reflect negative feelings about the ingroup as much as it reflects positive feelings about the outgroup," said Jimmy Calanchini, an assistant professor of psychology at UC Riverside and lead author of the study.
In the 1940s study, psychologists Kenneth and Mamie Clark used four dolls, identical except for color, and asked young Black girls questions such as which doll they would play with and which is "the nice doll." The girls chose the white dolls, leading the researchers to famously conclude that a Black child by the age of 5 is aware that "to be colored in... American society is a mark of inferior status." The study was subsequently used as supporting evidence in the 1954 landmark desegregation ruling Brown v. Board of Education.
Calanchini's study focused on measures of implicit bias. Whereas explicit bias is bias that is expressed directly -- for example, "I think this group is superior to that group" -- implicit bias is measured indirectly.
Calanchini measured implicit bias with the Implicit Association Test, or IAT, a computerized task in which participants sort words related to ingroups and outgroups, and pleasant and unpleasant concepts. If a participant responds more quickly and accurately to some word pairings than others -- for example, ingroup-good versus ingroup-bad -- it suggests that the faster/more accurate responses are more strongly connected in the participant's mind.
The study was administered through Internet-based sites to 879,000 volunteers, plus undergraduates at the University of California, Davis. The IATs measured implicit bias in the contexts of race -- Black, white, and Asian; sexual preference -- straight vs. gay; and age -- young vs. old.
Among members of minority or relatively lower-status groups -- Asian people, Black people, homosexual people, older people -- who showed implicit bias in favor of a higher-status outgroup, they consistently showed more positive evaluations of the outgroup than they did negative evaluations of their own group. The researchers found the same pattern among members of majority or relatively higher-status groups -- white people, straight people, younger people -- who showed implicit bias in favor of their own ingroup. Their liking of the ingroup showed more positive evaluations of the ingroup than negative evaluations of the outgroup.
"Whenever people like a higher-status group, it's not necessarily at the expense of the lower-status group," Calanchini concluded.
Calanchini surmises one possible reason is favorable representations of high-status groups in culture, like movies and politics.
There was an exception to the finding that one can like an outgroup without feeling negatively toward one's ingroup. White and young people who showed implicit bias in favor of other races or older people were more likely to have negative feelings about their ingroups.
The study, "The Contributions of Positive Outgroup and Negative Ingroup Evaluation to Implicit Bias Favoring Outgroups," was published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, or PNAS. Co-authors include Kathleen Schmidt, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale and Jeffrey Sherman and Samuel Klein, both of University of California, Davis. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Food

Study finds how diet has major impact on risk of Alzheimer's

Study finds how diet has major impact on risk of Alzheimer's

In a detailed study, researchers identify which diets are effective in lowering the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease.

Read More
Culture

Vishwakarma Puja 2023: Important aspects observed during this day

Vishwakarma Puja 2023: Important aspects observed during this day

‘Vishwakarma Jayanti’ is a Hindu festival that celebrates Lord Vishwakarma, the divine architect and craftsman of the gods. It is celebrated on September 17 this year.

Read More
Relationships

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists have passionately argued whether moral judgments share something distinctive that separates them from non-moral matters. Moral monists claim that morality is unified by a common characteristic and that all moral issues involve concerns about harm.

Read More
Quirky

Air pollution makes it difficult for bees to find flowers: Study

Air pollution makes it difficult for bees to find flowers: Study

According to a new study, air pollution prevents bees from finding flowers because it degrades the scent.

Read More
Quirky

Sense of order distinguishes humans from other animals: Study

Sense of order distinguishes humans from other animals: Study

Already earlier research at Stockholm University has suggested that only humans have the ability to recognize and remember so-called sequential information and that this ability is a fundamental building block underlying unique human cultural abilities.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.